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Within this article from The Times of London it is implicated that police in India may be carrying out contract killings under the guise of police work. According to the article, certain members of the police in India are killing unarmed suspects and lying about what happened in order to forgo trials...

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“Common Wealth” Games of Corruption..!

Posted by sachinthegreat | Posted in Others | Posted on 13-08-2010

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It’s not just the Commonwealth Games Organising Committee (OC) that is being investigated for financial irregularities. For the first time, the Comptroller and Auditor General of India (CAG) has named Commonwealth Games Federation president Mike Fennel and CEO Mike Hooper, besides OC chairman Suresh

Kalmadi, as party to a dubious selection process for consultants for international broadcasting rights.

This, the national auditor says in its internal report, led to a loss of R24.6 crore for the OC. It has also come across fresh cases of financial wrongdoings by the OC, resulting in a total loss of R66.49 crore.

Dubious appointment

The CAG report, based on a February-April audit, says the OC skipped a detailed technical evaluation of bidders before picking a consultant for international broadcast rights. “The OC executive board in principal approved M/s Fast Track Sales Ltd only on the basis of suggestions made by the CGF president and CEO and the OC chairman,” it says.

Not only did the OC pay Fast Track a higher commission than the other bidders, resulting in a loss of R5.20 crore, the firm’s failure to finalise a broadcasting rights agreement on time led to a further loss of R19 crore.

Hooper, however, told HT: “We recommended Fast Track on the basis of its record. They have also performed and brought revenue for the Games. OC was the agency that decided on the deal, not us. Fast Track also exceeded the revenue target. We stand by the decision.”

High commission to SMAM

The CAG found that the OC showed undue favour while appointing Australia-based Sports Marketing and Management (SMAM) to procure sponsorship and licensing rights. “Due diligence wasn’t observed by OC, which resulted in insufficient competition for selection of consultant for marketing of sponsorship and commercial rights,” the report states. The OC also agreed to pay SMAM an extra R 25.31 crore commission – even for sponsorships it didn’t garner.

R 5.55 cr wasted on old HQ

While the OC eventually shifted to a new address, it spent R 4.11 crore to renovate Indian Olympic Association Bhawan, where it was based earlier. Also, while at IOA Bhawan, it paid R 1.44 crore as rent and maintenance for the entire building though it occupied 34 per cent of the space.

Extravagant lawyer fees

The OC paid professional charges between R 5,000 and R 77,000 per hearing to lawyers, between R 5,000 and R 22,000 per conference and between R 25,000 and R 50,000 per drafting. It also paid a retainership fee of R 9,90,000 in 2008-09. This despite the law ministry fixing maximum fees of Rs 3,000 per case per day for hearings, Rs 750 for drafting and Rs 300 per conference.

R 3.11 cr rent for office space

The OC paid R 3.11 crore as rent for office space in Pallika Place occupied by various sports federations that are independent organizations responsible for their own expenses.

Non-recovery of R 20.46 lakh

Of the R 38.11 lakh the OC has to recover from various Commonwealth Games associations towards hotel and travel grants given to them during the Commonwealth Youth Games 2008 in Pune, it has recovered only R 17.65 lakh.

Dismissing the CAG charges as non-issue, OC secretary general Lalit Bhanot said: “They are just objections raised by CAG; these are old issues. We have replied to them. We have already terminated SMAM’s contract for non-performance.”

Gujarat Minister of State for Home charged for murder

Posted by sachinthegreat | Posted in Others | Posted on 13-08-2010

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Ahmedabad: Gujarat Minister of State for Home Amit Shah threatened Ahmedabad-based builder brothers Raman Patel and Dashrat Patel to give statement against Sohrabuddin Shaikh, who was killed in a fake encounter by Gujarat Police on November 26, 2005, according to the chargesheet filed by the CBI.

Patel brothers were threatened by Amit Shah through IPS officer and DIG of Gujarat Police, DG Vanzara, to give a statement against Sohrabhuddin or face dire consequences under The Prevention of Anti-Social Activities Act (PASA).

CNN-IBN has exclusive details of the chargsheet against Amit Shah which shows that the Gujarat Minister received Rs 70 lakh as payment from Patels in 2006.

Patel brothers had four meetings with Shah’s middleman to decide about the payment to be made to Shah. The payment was made in three installments and collected by Shah’s close aide on his behalf. CBI conducted a sting operation of all the four meetings where the middleman is instructing the Patelbrothers on how to mislead CBI.

On behest of Shah, DCP Abhay Chudasama tried to influence Sohrabhuddin’s family members by offering Rs 50 lakh to them. Chudasama also threatened saying that the same political party was in power in MP as well and that Shah will get them eliminated.

Shah had also threatened Zahid Kadri to withdraw a petition in a magistrate court and also a writ petition in Gujarat High Court or face the same fate as Sohrabhuddin.

After the case was handed over to the CBI by the Supreme Court, Shah directed all his friends and confidantes including Ajay Patel and Yashpal Chudasama to conceal the truth from CBI.

Shah is also said to have conveyed a message to Patel brothers through Ajay Patel that a written statement will be provided to them by Abhay Chudasama and that they have to stick to that statement before the CBI.

Asaram a saint or another maniac???

Posted by gaurav yadav | Posted in Others | Posted on 16-07-2010

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All I can say is that asaram is a maniac and i have some reasons to prove it.

1) Asarams books regularly state Hinduism as the mother of all religions, REGARDING other religions as minions.

2)Asaram continuously lashes out on Christianity and Islam in his books terming them as violent religions, his books even once has not showed the massacre by VHP on Christians.

3) Cases are being filed against him and he hasnt even once proved that he is untainted, even the handling of cases by CBI is questionable.

4)Asaram continuously tries to show that he is a liberator of people , while he hasnt done anything so great that we feel proud of him.

5)He has made ashrams on government lands and cases are against him for that, but he is tightlipped over this matter.

6)Countless FIRs have been filed against him but he only chooses to say that he is right others are wrong.

7)Only fanatic Hindus and some brainwashed ones are his disciples unlike some other gurus like Ramdev who have people of all cultures following them and who dont harp on radical Hinduism.

‘We were better under the British’

Posted by sachinthegreat | Posted in Others | Posted on 16-06-2010

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MUMBAI: More than six decades after Independence, freedom fighters who helped overthrow foreign rule are struggling against the bureaucracy of modern India.

“We were better under British rule,’’ wrote 82-year-old S J Chughani, president of the Mumbai Freedom Fighters Sabha, in recent letters to the state and central governments to express the sabha’s frustration at the slow pace at which applications for freedom fighter status, under the Centre’s Swatantra Sainik Samman Scheme, are approved.

Thousands across the nation still await ‘freedom fighter’ status and the pension and benefits that come with it. This includes at least 350 people from Mumbai and hundreds more across Maharashtra, which was a hotbed of the freedom movement.

Speaking of the Mumbai sabha’s experience, Chughani said, “I have exchanged innumerable letters with the President and written to various chief ministers of Maharashtra, but they do not even bother to reply.’’ The Mumbai sabha has around 380 members, but only 30 or so are recognised as patriots. The other 350 have been writing to officials for 20 years.

“I am sorry to say that in my last letter to the government I went to the extent of saying that we were better under British rule,’’ Chughani told TOI.

In fact, as recently as May 2010, the Bombay High Court had to tell the state government not to be unfair to Namdeo Gaikwad, whose plea for a pension had been pending before a state panel for several years. Gaikwad, in his 90s, fought for the liberation of Goa.

Pension has been granted to 1.71 lakh freedom fighters or their eligible dependents across the country under the Centre’s Swatantra Sainik Samman Scheme, the main one for this purpose in the country, since its inception in 1972 and till October 2009.

Till January 2010, 17,909 people from Maharashtra had received pension under the scheme, but many more await this recognition even as they and their dependents get along in years.

According to official sources, the Ministry of Home Affairs is in the final stages of clearing the names of 1,614 people who took part in the movements to liberate Goa and Hyderabad. Many of those who fought to liberate Goa are from Maharashtra.

If the recognition to those involved in the Goa Liberation Movement during 1954-55 (Phase II in the documents) comes this year, it would come 55 years after their sacrifice. Likewise, participants of the Hyderabad Liberation Movement during 1947-48 would be getting recognition 62 years after their efforts. Such recognition might be too late, because the freedom fighters and their kin would be well advanced in years or even deceased. Kin like unmarried daughters, widows or parents also get benefits.

One reason for such delays is that certain historical events were not considered part of the freedom struggle for several decades by the government. For instance, only in 2003 did the government allow participants of the Goa Liberation Movement and those of the Hyderabad Liberation Movement to be included on the list of freedom fighters. This also means they can be eligible for pension and benefits only from 2003 onwards.

Chughani recounted the pitched battles that freedom fighters in Mumbai fought with colonial police to challenge foreign rule. His office at Grant Road is now the nodal point for several freedom fighters to come together and share their problems. “I have met almost every minister and MP who matters. But nothing has been done. We just want our due, but what really hurts is that in many cases they do not even reply to our letters,’’ Chughani said.

Pension is granted according to guidelines in the Swatantra Sainik Samman Scheme. In 2009-10 alone, the central government spent Rs 578 crore on benefits such as free railway passes, medical facilities, accommodation and monthly pensions, which can be as high as Rs 7,000 depending on which movement the freedom fighter was involved in.
The largest number of beneficiaries of the scheme are from Bihar, followed by West Bengal, Uttar Pradesh and Maharashtra. A large contingent of freedom fighters who fought under the banner of the Subhas Chandra Bose-led Indian National Army have been recognised by the government.

There have even been fake claimants, with the authorities coming across 35 cases last year in which details had been fudged to portray oneself as a freedom fighter.

India among the least peaceful places

Posted by sachinthegreat | Posted in Others | Posted on 16-06-2010

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India is among the least peaceful of major countries in the world and is getting even less peaceful year on year.
India Riots
This was the major finding of the Global Peace Index (GPI) Report an annual publication by the Institute for Economics and Peace (IEP), a global think tank focused on researching the relationship between economics, business and peace.

According to the 2010 report, which considered a range of peace-related variables among 149 countries, India’s rank was 128, six ranks lower than its 2009 position.

Some of India’s key neighbours in South Asia ranked in the bottom 20 per cent along with India — Sri Lanka was ranked 133rd, Pakistan 145th, Afghanistan 147th. However, Nepal did much better, ranked in 82nd place and Bangladesh in 87th. Bhutan, ranked at 36th, narrowly missed being in the top 20 per cent of nations.

Commenting on the results, the IEP said, “South Asia saw the greatest decrease in peacefulness, as a result of increased involvement in conflicts, a rise in deaths from internal conflict and human rights abuses. It added, “The main countries experiencing decreases in peacefulness were India, Sri Lanka and Pakistan.”

The report’s authors also observed that, overall, the world became “slightly less peaceful in the past year”, adding that in some nations, an intensification of conflicts and growing instability appears to be linked to the global economic downturn in late 2008 and early 2009.

Hinting at the possibility that rapid development might have brought more conflict in its wake the IEP also noted, “Three BRIC countries — Russia (143), India (128) and China (80) — saw substantial declines in peacefulness.” However Brazil’s score remained essentially stable (83) compared to the 2009 Index.

While most developed countries including those of Western Europe and Canada, ranked in the top 20 per cent of peaceful nations, the United States was an anomaly in this regard, ranking at 85th, outranked by countries such as Rwanda, Indonesia, the United Arab Emirates and Bosnia and Herzegovina.

Ranked low in Asia-Pacific region

India also ranked 19th out of 25 countries in the Asia-Pacific region. The leader in the region, New Zealand, was also the most peaceful nation globally. Close on its heels were Iceland and Japan. Iraq was estimated to be the least peaceful among all countries, accompanied at the bottom of the table by Somalia, Afghanistan and Sudan.

The identification and weighting of indicators in the GPI, which is compiled by the Economist Intelligence Unit, was undertaken by an international panel of experts in the study of peace.

“How peaceful a country is depends on the internal structures, institutions, and attitudes that sustain and promote peace as well as on external factors,” said Clyde McConaghy, board director of the IEP.

He added, “This year’s top five countries, and more peaceful countries in general, have certain things in common: well functioning governments, stable business environments, respect for human rights, low levels of corruption, high rates of participation in education, and freedom of information.”

As Cricket Grew in India, Corruption Followed

Posted by meghana_sharma | Posted in Others | Posted on 16-06-2010

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Founded three seasons ago, the Indian Premier League managed to make the sport of cricket sexy.India ’s corporate titans bought teams, Bollywood stars infused matches with celebrity glamour and fans from Mumbai to Dubai to New Jersey followed the league on television as its value rose to more than $4 billion.

Lalit Kumar Modi, center, commissioner of the Indian Premier League, is under scrutiny.

For many Indians, the league, known as the I.P.L., became a symbol of a newly dynamic and confident India that was expanding its influence in the world. Yet after weeks of allegations of graft and financial malfeasance, the resignation of a government minister and the suspension of the league’s charismatic commissioner, the league has become emblematic of something else: how much the old and often corrupt political and business elite still dominates the country.

“The great pity in India is that creations like the I.P.L. became a victim of their own success,” the editor in chief of the magazine India Today, Aroon Purie, wrote this month. “Where there is money involved, especially large sums, corruption is not far behind.”

Cricket may befuddle much of the world, but the sport is an obsession in India, which is one reason the cricket scandal — dubbed I.P.L. Gate by the Indian news media — has assumed such import. Government tax examiners have confiscated accounting records, and the Board of Control for Cricket in India, the sport’s regulatory body, is expected to hold a pivotal hearing in coming days for the league’s suspended commissioner, Lalit Kumar Modi.

Insiders on the cricket board depict Mr. Modi as a visionary who operated the league by fiat and enriched himself and his family members through hidden shares in teams or fees from television and Internet contracts. But the board is also in a compromised position. It is a nongovernmental organization dominated by some of the country’s most powerful politicians, including Arun Jaitley, a top leader of the opposition Bharatiya Janata Party, and Sharad Pawar, the agriculture minister.

Many commentators are skeptical that the board could have been completely ignorant of Mr. Modi’s actions. Mr. Modi says he did nothing wrong. Even before the scandal, the board was criticized as lacking transparency and was accused of conflicts of interest. One board member is also the owner of an I.P.L. team.

For decades, politicians have had their fingers in the game. Cricket has been organized around state teams competing in regional and national tournaments, with elite players selected for India’s national team. Every state has a cricket association, often led by the state’s chief minister or some other influential politician or bureaucrat. Today, political figures lead cricket associations in at least six states.

Indian cricket

G. Rajaraman, a longtime cricket journalist, said these relationships initially benefited the sport because the politician could help a team get resources. But that equation changed since money began entering the sport, first with television in the 1990s and then with the advent of the I.P.L. Soon, more politicians were vying for control. Mr. Pawar, the agriculture minister, took over the national cricket board in 2005, with Mr. Modi as his protégé.

Having lived in the United States, Mr. Modi saw how commercial leagues like the N.B.A. promoted stars and hometown teams to excite fans and generate revenues. European soccer, especially the English Premier League, was already televised across Asia just as an emerging Indian middle class was starting to discover sports as a leisure spectator activity.

“Modi saw this and he said, ‘We need to create our own icons,’ ” Mr. Rajaraman said.

Mr. Modi formatted the I.P.L. as a made-for-television product. He outraged purists by adopting a condensed version of the sport that reduced the length of a match from a day, or several days, to three television-friendly hours. Mr. Modi also brought in cheerleaders and movie stars.

Bollywood’s biggest star, Shah Rukh Khan, bought part of a team, and some fans paid hundreds of dollars to mingle with players, fashion models and celebrities at postgame parties that continued into the early morning hours. Celebrity Web sites began carrying photos of the parties or gossip about which Bollywood stars were seen in the stands.

“A lot of women started watching,” Mr. Rajaraman said. “There are a lot of people who watch to see what Shah Rukh Khan is doing at the end of the game, or what new T-shirt he is wearing.”

Ramachandra Guha, a historian who has written a book about cricket, said the I.P.L. tailored itself to the aspirations, and alienation, of an Indian middle class disillusioned with the country’s corruption and poverty. But Mr. Guha said the organization of the league — with teams located in India’s most affluent cities as opposed to having one in every state — has effectively mirrored the deep inequality in society.

“It is the India that is doing well economically,” he said. “It shuts itself off from the other 800 million Indians who live in the hinterlands.”

Now, Mr. Modi is gathering documents for his hearing, while government officials have come under scrutiny. A junior minister of foreign affairs, Shashi Tharoor, was forced to resign because of his involvement with a consortium that won a bid for a team in his home state.

Others who seem closely linked to the league have so far stayed in power as the scandal has assumed political overtones. Mr. Pawar heads a regional political party that is part of the coalition government led by the Congress Party. As yet, investigators have not accused him of any wrongdoing.

And the country’s civil aviation minister, Praful Patel, has faced questions on whether he was involved in the bidding process for a new franchise and whether his ministry had showed favoritism to his daughter, a former model who helps coordinate the I.P.L.’s travel. In late April, the state-owned airline, Air India, canceled a scheduled flight, delaying passengers, so that Mr. Patel’s daughter and several I.P.L. players could use it as a paid charter.

Dhiraj Nayyar, a senior editor at The Financial Express, said the cricket scandal was best understood in the context of India’s economic evolution. When India’s stock exchange took off in the late 1980s and early 1990s, scandals erupted over market manipulation until regulatory structures were strengthened. Today, the same absence of transparency and regulation exists in cricket.

“The I.P.L. is a curious creature that combines the best and worst of Indian capitalism — fabulous enterprise and outcomes on the one side, riddled with cronyism, patronage and power politics on the other,” Mr. Nayyar wrote recently. “In many ways the I.P.L. is a confirmation of what India really is: an emerging economy.”

Complaint against mental harassment to child by Richmond Global School, Mianwali Nagar, New Delhi-110087.

Posted by Anil Nigam | Posted in Others | Posted on 11-05-2010

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Subject : Complaint against mental harassment to child by Richmond Global School, Mianwali Nagar, New Delhi-110087.

2. Violation of the provisions of “The Right of Children to Free and Compulsory Education Act, 2009.”

Sir,
I pleased to introduced my self ANIL NLGAM residing at C-61, J.J. COLONY JAWALA PURI, SUNDER VIHAR, NEW DELHI – 110087, & belong to the Scheduled Caste (Jatav ) .
My elder son (Yash Nigam, class Ist D) studying in RICHMOND GLOBAL SCHOOL, MIANWALI NAGAR, NEW DELHI-110087, and I want to continue his education in this school, but financially I am not strong enough to afford such a massive amount of fees.

I gave a request application for fees concession of my son in reserve category on 01/04/2010 under a scheme for underprivileged children, but no response from school till date.

On 29/04/2010, school principle sent back my son to home after half session. When I gone to school, I request to receptionist for receiving my complaint, she was refused to me.
Next day I sent my son to school, they repeat the same action. When I gone to school asked the reason behind it, the Receptionist was so arrogant that she refused to answer my questions. After 10 minutes of verbal discussion they simply told me that we don’t know. But I have not received satisfactory answer by the Office staff. Its a shame that Education is being used as a money minting machine.

I request to you kindly to look into this matter & issue necessary instructions to the concerned department to take necessary action.

Your instantaneous action in this matter will be appreciated highly.

Thanking you,

Sincerely yours

Anil Nigam F/o Yash Nigam
Mobile : 9971077740

Hindu ‘God-Man’ in British Airways prostitution scandal

Posted by meghana_sharma | Posted in Others | Posted on 29-03-2010

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A Hindu clergyman and self-styled “god-man” with over 100,000 reputed followers in India has been caught running a US$10 million high-end prostitution racket involving British Airways hostesses.

Shiv Myra Dwivedi, aka Ichchadhari Sant Swami Bhimanand Ji Maharaj Chitrakoot Wale, 39, claims to be a follower of the legendary Shirdi Sai Baba. Dwivedi was allgedly using his Sai Baba Temple in Khanpur, South Delhi as a front for an operation that employed somewhere between 60 and 200 prostitutes across India. Also found inside Dwivedi’s temple were drug and pornography caches on an epic scale. Adding to the fun, it appears that phone records found inside the temple link the prostitution operation to prominent Delhi cops, Indian television stars and politicians.

The Indian press is already calling Dwivedi the “pimp guru.”

The operation of the “pimp guru” employed mainly students and air hostesses, including British Airways and Jagson employees. Dwivedi was arrested over the weekend by Delhi police while conducting a deal with another (alleged) pimp behind a cinema in the city’s Saket neighborhood. A police team sent to raid Dwivedi’s temple subsequently found a labyrinth of hidden tunnels and rooms that contained personal diaries, cash, financial records for the operation and healthy supplies of pornography and undisclosed illegal drugs. According to Delhi authorities, the Swami hid the entrance to the secret tunnels in a meditation room.

The “pimp guru” also runs a 200-bed hospital and has several power political patrons in the Samajwadi Party and reportedly has several well-known politicians among his clients.

But for all of Dwivedi’s religious trappings, his pimp skills seem defiantly old-school:

“He used the guise of spirituality to run an organised prostitution racket since 1999 and has made billions of rupees by supplying women to his high-profile clients,” said a police officer, refusing to be named.

“He would force young women to join the sex racket, offered them money, expensive gifts and had even provided them with cars.”

Apart from the Delhi temple, the prostitution operation also rented out of several rented houses in Delhi and in the state of Uttar Pradesh. According to Indian sources, his non-Indian prostitutes would dress only in saffron clothes in public to avoid suspicion.

Dwivedi, a native of Uttar Pradesh, worked his way up from a security guard at a massage parlor in the 1990s to become a prominent guru. But he had trouble along the way: Dwivedi was previously arrested in 2000 for running a prostitution ring centered around yoga and meditation workshops.Strangest of all, reports indicate that Dwivedi’s father and brother were previously arrested on unrelated murder allegations in his hometown of Chitrakoot.

British Airways is investigating the allegations.

Congress’s assets soar, is India’s richest party

Posted by sachinthegreat | Posted in Others | Posted on 28-03-2010

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NEW DELHI: Being in power pays. Congress’s declared assets of Rs 340 crore for 2007-08, with an opening balance of Rs 271 crore, puts the party way ahead of rival BJP and regional powerhouses like Samajwadi Party, BSP and CPM. Even for the assessed year, BJP lagged Congress by more than Rs 100 crore.

According to income tax returns of political parties for the assessment year 2008-09 – for which an expenditure-income account of 2007-08 is considered – Congress spent more than Rs 110 crore on elections, meetings and publicity. Its expenses under just these three heads are more than the total income generated by smaller parties. CPM showed Rs 69 crore as income while BSP and SP showed Rs 79 crore and Rs 22 crore. BJP’s earnings at Rs 120 crore were only slightly higher.

Clearly, being in power since 2004 has seen the Congress coffers swell. Its total assets were valued at Rs 65 crore in 2002, rose to Rs 136 crore in 2004, to Rs 229 crore in 2006, Rs 271 crore in 2007 and touched Rs 340 crore in 2008. Also, while Congress made nearly Rs 200 crore just from sale of coupons and donations in 2007-08, BJP earned Rs 120 crore from donations and membership fees.

The figures shown by parties are believed to be a fraction of actual expenses, but serve to reflect a trend. IIM-Ahmedabad alumnus and national coordinator of Association of Democratic Reforms Anil Bairwal said there was a huge gap between bottomlines of parties and expenditure incurred during polls.

Congress’s income swelled to nearly Rs 500 crore, taking into account its Rs 270 crore opening balance. BJP’s opening balance was Rs 104 crore, BSP’s was Rs 68 crore, SP’s Rs 140 crore and CPM, Rs 102 crore. It is clear Congress’s income appreciated most sharply. BJP’s balancesheet for this year read Rs 177 crore, for CPM, it was Rs 156 crore, SP Rs 144 crore and BSP Rs 118 crore.

The SP’s lead over rival BSP may be attributed that it was still in power in UP, a situation that changed during the course of the year. With I-T returns reflecting the electoral fortunes of parties, the assessments may change if SP remains out of power for longer. CPM’s relatively sound finances may be based on its wins in Kerala and West Bengal in 2007. BJP’s assets in 2004 were worth Rs 155 crore while Congress’s were Rs 136 crore but the situation changed dramatically after NDA was ousted.

BSP, which is in power in the largest state of Uttar Pradesh, and claims to survive on donations, made less than Rs 70 crore in 2008 – Rs 47 crore through donations and Rs 20 crore by way of membership fees. Interestingly, BSP, in a statement submitted before the tax authorities, claimed it had not received any donations above Rs 20,000.

But its penchant for dealing in real estate is quite obvious, with the party claiming deduction on account of loss it incurred for sale of a flat in Grandeur Apartment in Jiyamau area in Lucknow. While BSP claims to have bought the apartment for Rs 28.9 lakh in 2006, it was sold in seven months at a loss of nearly Rs 2 lakh. The party also claimed it had been gifted two bungalows during 2007-08 – No 5 Lal Bahadur Shastri Marg, Lucknow, worth Rs 2.35 crore and No 11 Sardar Patel Marg, New Delhi worth Rs 10 crore.

An analysis of I-T returns of these parties for previous years between 2002 and 2006 made by ADR revealed assets rising almost in direct proportion to their standing in Lok Sabha.

More seats in the lower House of Parliament, higher the earnings. The annualized growth in income of Congress, BJP, Samajwadi Party, BSP, CPM and CPI was pegged in the four years between 2002 and 2006 in the range of 3% to 41%.

Swamiji Nithyananda Shocking Sex Video And Oil Massage Video With Actress

Posted by meghana_sharma | Posted in Others | Posted on 04-03-2010

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Swamy Nityananda is the most popular among Bhakti channel viewers. He has great following for his preaching on Bhagawadgeeta etc. He hails from Tamil Nadu  and freshly he was trapped having sex with a popular Tamil actress. A spy camera was placed in bed room and he was caught red handed in that while drinking beer, swallowing a Viagra pill and making hardcore love with Tamil actress. We will be revealing the name of Tamil actress shortly as her face was blurred in the video. The video was shown by SUN TV and then ABN Andhra Jyothy freshly.

Just a couple of days ago, Kalki Bhagawan was in discussion for addicting his devotees with drugs and now Swamy Nityananda is a rogue in the eyes of public with this video.